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Kousso (Hagenia abyssinica
WILLD.) Click on graphic for larger
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Kousso
Botanical: Hagenia Abyssinica (WILLD.), Brayera anthelmintica (KUNTH.)
Family: N.O. Rosaceae
---Synonyms---Banksia Abyssinica. Kooso. Kusso. Kosso.
Cossoo. Cusso. ---Parts Used---Herb, unripe fruit, and the
dried panicles of the pistillate flowers.
---Habitat---North-Eastern Africa, and cultivated in Abyssinia;
official in United States of America.
---Description---The tree is named after Dr. K. G.
Hagen of K”nigsberg, a German botanist (d. 1829), and also after A.
Brayera, a French physician in Constantinople, who wrote a monograph on
the tree in 1823. It is a beautiful tree growing about 20 feet high, at an
elevation of 3,000 to 8,000 feet. The flowers are unisexual, small, of a
greenish colour, becoming purple. The dried flowers have a slight balsamic
odour, and the taste is bitter and acrid; the female flowers are chiefly
collected, although not exclusively so. 'Loose Kousso,' i.e. flowers
stripped from their panicles, sometimes come into the market, often with
some staminate flowers among it. These are much less active, easily distin
guished by their greeny colour, fertile stamens and outer hairy sepals,
whereas the female flowers are a dark reddish colour. As a medicine it is
very apt to be adulterated, owing to its high price; therefore it is
advisable to buy it in its unpowdered state.
---Constituents---A volatile oil, a bitter acrid
resin, tannic acid, and a bitter principle called A Kosin and B Kosin,
which is found in Kousso, but thought to be decomposition products. The
principle constituent of Kousso is Koso-toxin, a yellow amorphous body,
possibly closely allied to filicia acid, and Rottlerin; other inactive
colourless bodies are crystalline Protokosin and Kosidin.
---Medicinal Action and Uses---Purgative and
anthelmintic; the Abyssinians are greatly troubled with tapeworm, and
Kousso is used by them to expel the worms. One dose is said to be
effective in destroying both kinds of tapeworms, the taenia solium
and bothriocephalus latus; but as it possesses little cathartic
power the subsequent administration of a purgative is generally necessary
to bring away the destroyed ectozoon. The dose of the flowers when
powdered is from 4 to 5 1/2 drachms, macerated in 3 gills of lukewarm
water for 15 minutes; the unstrained infusion is taken in two or three
doses following each other, freely drinking lemon-juice or tamarind water
before and after the doses. It is advisable to fast twenty-four or
forty-eight hours before taking the drug. The operation is usually safe,
effective, and quick, merely causing sometimes a slight nausea, but it has
never failed to expel the worm. Occasionally emesis takes place or
diuresis, and collapse follows, but cases of this sort are extremely rare.
It is said in Abyssinia that honey gathered from beehives immediately the
Kousso plants have flowered is very effective in teaspoonful doses as a
taenicide, its effect being to poison the worms.
---Dosage---Infusion of 1/2 oz. to 1 pint of
boiling water is taken in 4 oz. doses, and repeated at short intervals.
Fluid extract, 2 to 4 drachms.
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